PS3 sales up, PS2 finally in decline
Sunday, November 1st, 2009Sony’s PlayStation division finally has some good news, or at least some signs of it, amidst disappointing financial reports from Sony. Although the PlayStation group has reportedly lost 4.7 billion dollars since it launched the PS3 console, sales seem to be picking up.
Adding up its second-quarter results, Sony reports 3.2 million sales, a 1.1 million increase over the same quarter a year earlier. The same period also saw a signficant increase in game sales for the PS3 console.
Meanwhile, Sony’s little-engine-that-could, the PlayStation 2, is finally showing signs of decline. The system has been selling comparably to the PS3, as well as other current-generation competitors, the Xbox 360 and Nintendo Wii. Now, the PS2 has declined to 1.9 million in sales with only about half of the total games sold compared to the previous year.
The PSP also had a bit of a decline, dropping from 3.2 million to 3 million in sales, though game sales are up.
Sony bet heavily on the long-term adoption of its technically-superior PS3 console when it realased the device in November 2006. The console had to compete with the Xbox 360, which was out a year earlier, and Nintendo Wii–both of which had lower price-tags and comparable, or arguably superior, game libraries.
Adoption of the PS3 has been slower than Sony expected, but if sales continue to rise there’s hope for the PS3 yet.

